TL;DR - Ban the substances making NFL players super fast behemoths and you eliminate the amount of injuries in the NFL.
Did NFL players in the 40s, 50s, and 60s find themselves getting seriously injured nearly every game? Have those players gone on to have long term concussion problems that lead to suicide and murders? Are they crazy? Did they lose decades off their lives?
I haven't heard about any of them facing the issues that the players from the 70s, 80s, and 90s have had. It also seems like the prognosis for current players is grim.
So to avoid lawsuits (because NFL players can't take responsibility for their own decisions to play a game that involves slamming bodies and helmets into each other but that's another thread), the NFL is looking at all ways to make the game safer.
We've had the concussion era, and I think that's on the downslide. Players are penalized, ejected, and fined for any hit to the head or using their head to hit someone else. Football will soon feature helmets as the new facemask. Don't touch it at all.
Now they're moving on to knees. Because where else would players tackle a runner if they can't go high? They go low. So now we'll see more penalties and rules and regulations that prevent defenders and blockers and runners from ever going at someone's knees no matter intent.
But what's the real problem here?
Is it the way players play the game?
Or is it the fact that Trent Richardson is 5'9 230 pounds and was clocked at a 4.45 40 yard dash? The fact that he can bench press 225 pounds 25 times? The fact that he's been seen bench pressing almost 500 pounds?
Perhaps it's because a safety can be 5'11 210 pounds with a 4.5 40. Maybe a guy like Ed Reed having less than 10% body fat while still being 210 pounds is the problem.
You really want to fix the NFL? Ban ALL performance enhancing substances. ALL of them. Not just steroids and HGH. Not just a few chemicals or pain killers. All of them.
That includes creatine, Hydroxycut, whey protein shakes, and arginine.
Make it so that NFL players must eat food, take a multivitamin, and exercise. That's all they get for preparing to play in the NFL.
While our knowledge of strength and conditioning and nutrition is well beyond what we knew back when football first got started, we're still at a point of unnatural ability and size.
No one should be 5'11 230 pounds of solid muscle with a 4.44 40 yard dash like Eddie Lacy is. Our bones aren't built to withstand a gigantic person running that fast directly into you with reckless abandonment.
http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/9604635/nfl-study-hits-knees-eye-rule-change?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitterNEW YORK -- The NFL will keep a close eye on hits to the knees of defenseless players this season, with the possibility of extending the rules protecting such players.
If the league's competition committee finds enough evidence this season that hits to the knees are "becoming a problem," it could take action, chief of football operations Ray Anderson told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
The committee could make a recommendation to the owners next March to prohibit direct hits to the knees of defenseless players. The owners would then vote on such a change.
"We are always looking at plays that may elevate themselves and we do include in that category hits on defenseless players," Anderson said. "And certainly the hits to knees to players who have not had the opportunity to protect themselves or are not looking in the direction of where the hit comes from -- we have had a couple hits whereby a player was hit below [or at] the knees."
Currently, hits to the head and neck of defenseless players are banned. But two direct hits to the knee in preseason games that injured Miami tight end Dustin Keller (by Texans rookie D.J. Swearinger) and Minnesota defensive tackle Kevin Williams (on low block by 49ers guard Joe Looney) have drawn complaints from some players.
Keller is out for the season with several torn ligaments. Williams has a hyperextended knee.
Anderson said the league will monitor plays during the season, study the data when the competition committee begins meeting after the season and see whether such hits to the knees are an "aberration or becoming a problem."
"This issue has not directly come up," Anderson added. "But when we have had discussions when making the head and neck area completely off-limits to players, there was some concern players might lower their targets and might include knees and below. We will look at that going forward."